Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 204South Africa
R.M.S v L.N.M and Another (2025/019141) [2025] ZAGPJHC 204 (28 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 February 2025
Headnotes
at Randburg under file reference number: 14/1/4/2-67/2025 by additional Magistrate Mr W Vittee and referring the matter back to the Children’s Court for determination relating to residency, care and contact of a minor child;
Judgment
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## R.M.S v L.N.M and Another (2025/019141) [2025] ZAGPJHC 204 (28 February 2025)
R.M.S v L.N.M and Another (2025/019141) [2025] ZAGPJHC 204 (28 February 2025)
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sino date 28 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2025-019141
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
F.
MARCANDONATOS 28 February 2025
In
the matter between:
R.M.S
Applicant
and
L.N.M.
First Respondent
THE
MAGISTRATE CHILDREN’S COURT
Second Respondent JOHANNESBURG NORTH, RANDBURG
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties' and/or the
parties' representatives by email and by
being uploaded to Case
Lines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 28
FEBRUARY 2025
JUDGMENT
MARCANDONATOS
AJ
:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The
Applicant, in this Counter Application, seeks civil contempt
proceedings arising from the failure by the Respondent to comply
with
Orders issued out of the Randburg Children’s Court under case
number 14/1/4/2 – 67/2024 on
12
December 2024
,
24
January 2025
and
07
February 2025
.
[1]
The circumstances which have given rise to this situation are set out
hereunder. For convenience, I shall refer to the Applicant
in this
Counter Application as Mom and the Respondent, as Dad.
THE
ISSUES
[2]
On
12
February 2025
,
Dad launched Motion proceedings, as a matter of urgency against Mom,
as well as the Magistrate of the Children’s Court,
Johannesburg
North, Randburg, in which he sought,
inter
alia,
the following relief:-
[2]
2.1.
condoning and dispensing with Dad’s non-compliance with the
forms, time limits and
service provided for in the Uniform Rules of
Court and that the matter is enrolled and heard as an urgent
Application in terms
of Uniform Rule 6(12);
2.2.
reviewing and setting aside paragraphs 1 to 6 of an Order made on
07
February 2025
, in the Children’s Court, Johannesburg
North held at Randburg under file reference number: 14/1/4/2-67/2025
by additional
Magistrate Mr W Vittee and referring the matter back to
the Children’s Court for determination relating to residency,
care
and contact of a minor child;
2.3.
maintaining the
status quo
regarding the temporary residency
and care of the minor child with the paternal grandparents in
KwaZulu-Natal until a final Order
of Court determining permanent
residency, care and contact of the said child;
2.4.
allowing supervised contact by Mom and Dad with the minor child in
the presence of either
one or both of the paternal grandparents of
the minor child, once a week, on separate days for 2 hours each;
2.5.
Dad to make the minor child available in Johannesburg escorted by one
or both of the paternal
grandparents at a cost to be shared between
the Mom and Dad on a 50/50 basis for interviews, assessments,
evaluations, treatment
or any other purpose required by Court
appointed social worker(s), the South African Police Service
investigating a possible criminal
offence committed against the minor
child, the Teddy Bear Clinic and/or the Curator
ad Litem
,
Advocate Vida Scheepers;
2.6.
appointing Advocate Vida Scheepers as the Curator
ad litem
on
behalf of the minor child;
2.7.
that Advocate Vida Scheepers is conferred various powers as detailed
in the Notice of Motion,
in her capacity as the Curator
ad litem
;
2.8.
that the powers of Advocate Vida Scheepers are illustrative and not
exhaustive and that
the said Curator
ad litem
shall possess
any and all additional powers reasonably necessary or incidental to
the fulfilment of her appointed role and responsibilities
in service
of the minor child’s best interests;
2.9.
Advocate Vida Scheepers is to file a Report containing her findings
and recommendations
in her capacity as Curator
ad litem
to the
Children’s Court within a reasonable time frame;
2.10.
the costs of the Curator
ad litem
to be shared equally between
Mom and Dad.
[3]
It is common cause I informed the parties that, sitting as a single
Judge in the Family Court, I could not hear the Review
and Setting
Aside Application, as same stood to be determined, as a consequence
of the applicable practice in this Division, by
a Bench compromising
of two Judges. By agreement between the parties, the relief relating
to the Review and Setting Aside Application
of the Order dated
07
February 2025
, in the Children’s Court, Randburg, was
postponed
sine die
, costs reserved, with Dad abandoning the
relief sought in paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of the Notice of Motion.
[4]
On the back of my aforesaid advices, Dad sought to Amend and include
relief by seeking to suspend the Order made on
07 February
2025
, in the Children’s Court, Johannesburg North, held
at Randburg, file reference number: 14/1/4/2-67/2024 whilst
persisting
with the urgent relief sought in respect of the
appointment of a Curator
ad litem
. I delivered
ex tempore
Judgments in respect of the Amendment as well as the appointment of a
Curator
ad litem
, not allowing the Amendment and striking the
Application for the appointment of a Curator
ad litem
, for
lack of urgency.
[5]
As a
consequence of the Application by Dad, simultaneously, Mom proceeded
with the civil contempt proceedings as referred to herein
above, as a
matter of urgency, against Dad, in which she sought,
inter
alia,
the following relief:-
[3]
5.1.
the forms and service provided for in the Rules of this Honourable
Court be dispensed with
and the matter be disposed of by way of
urgency in terms of Rule 6(12);
5.2.
the Review Application in respect of the Orders issued out of the
Randburg Children’s
Court on
12 December 2024
,
24
January 2025
and
07 February 2025
be dismissed
with a punitive cost Order;
5.3.
that the Children’s Court Orders be upheld and Dad be compelled
to, as a matter of
urgency, comply with the said Orders by returning
the minor child to Johannesburg, at Dad’s expense, to give
effect to the
Children’s Court Orders;
5.4.
Dad is held in contempt of the provisions of the Children’s
Court Orders;
5.5.
Dad be committed to imprisonment for contempt of Court for a period
of 30 days, or such
period as this Honourable Court deems just and
equitable;
5.6.
in the alternate, to committing Dad to imprisonment for a period of
30 days, that Dad be
committed to prison for a period of 30 days,
which committal is to be suspended on condition that Dad complies
with all the existing
Children’s Court Orders as well as
subsequent and future Court Orders in relation to the pending
Randburg Children’s
Court proceedings as aforesaid.
[6]
Dad opposed the Counter Application.
[7]
Given the various issues raised, both in respect of Dad’s
Application and this Counter Application, the matter was
argued over
2 days, the Counter Application having rolled over into the second
day.
[8]
On the
morning of the second day of hearing, Dad’s representative
filed Heads of Argument in the Counter Application, not
previously
having done so, wherein at paragraph 37 therein
[4]
it is stated that:-
“
It is only when
the applicant has to postpone the review and settling aside
application on 19 February 2025 on the first day of
hearing of the
main application before court that the possibility of him not having
the 07/02 order set aside on urgent basis is
realised.
The
applicant immediately actions compliance with the 07/02 Order by
arranging for the minor child to be flown up to Johannesburg
and be
handed to the social worker and Omphile House
.
Proof of
this will be placed before court as soon as it becomes available.
”
[
my emphasis
]
[9]
As a result and prior to further argument, I raised whether in light
of that stated at paragraph 37 of the Heads of Argument
and if indeed
the child would be returned to Johannesburg and in compliance with
the
07 February 2025
Randburg Children’s Court
Order, whether the Counter Application, was not in the circumstances,
academic and/or counter-productive.
[10]
The parties asked to briefly stand the matter down, whereafter I was
informed that Dad was indeed returning the child
to Johannesburg and
would comply with the
07 February 2025
Randburg
Children’s Court Order and whilst both parties agreed that the
Counter Application would then become academic/counter-productive,
the sticking point, was that Dad wanted Mom to waive the costs order
granted in the striking of the urgent relief sought by Dad
for the
appointment of a Curator
ad litem
.
[11]
Mom was not willing to waive the said costs Order.
[12]
Each party then presented open Tenders.
[13]
Mom’s Tender being that:-
13.1.
Dad undertakes to return the child to Johannesburg on
20
February 2025
and hand over the child in accordance with the
07 February 2025
Randburg Children’s Court Order;
and
13.2.
no order as to costs.
[14]
Dad’s Tender being that:-
14.1.
the matter stands down until 14h00 whereafter the Application will
fall away as by then it was contended
that Dad would have complied
with the
07 February 2025
Randburg Children’s
Court Order; and
14.2.
no order as to costs.
[15]
Given that the parties were unable to reach Agreement, the Counter
Application was argued.
CONTEMPT
OF COURT
Points
in limine
[16]
Dad raised
two points
in
limine
,
the first being lack of urgency and the second being lack of
Jurisdiction of this Court to hear the Counter Application.
[5]
[17]
Having heard argument I delivered an
ex tempore
Judgment, not
having upheld either
points in limine
.
The relevant
context
[18]
It is
common cause that proceedings are pending between the parties in the
Magistrate’s Children’s Court, Johannesburg
North,
Randburg, under file reference number: 14/1/4/2/-67/2025 in which
Orders were granted on
12
December 2024
,
24
January 2025
and
07
February 2025
.
[6]
[19]
In respect
of the
12
December 2024
Order it provides that:
[7]
“
THE
FOLLOWING ORDER IS MADE: INTERIM ORDER
recommendations of the
Social worker made an order of court. By agreement. Telephone contact
by the party without the minor child
allowed between 6pm & 7pm.
Video contact provided the mother gets a phone with capabilities. The
neutral venue is Spar Robindale
pp to 16 April 2025.
parties warned.
Father to be provided
1 weekend a month
.”
[20]
In respect
of the
24
January 2025
Order, neither party had a copy thereof given that neither was able
to gain access to the content of the Children’s Court
file to
obtain a copy. The parties are in dispute as to the content
thereof.
[8]
[21]
In respect
of the
07
February 2025
Order, it provides as follows:
[9]
“
THE
FOLLOWING ORDER IS MADE: INTERIM ORDER/FINAL ORDER
1. By no later
than Tuesday the 11/02/2025, the applicant, Respondent & Social
worker are to facilitate and arrange a
flight from King Shasha
international airport to OR Tambo international airport for the minor
child and one of the father’s
family members who the child is
currently residing with. Both the applicant and Respondent are to pay
for the costs on a 50/50
basis.
2. the Social
worker will collect the minor child from OR Tambo international
airport and place the minor child into a place
of safety being
Omphile House.
3. Immediately
upon the child being placed in the place of safety, Ms tanya Kriel is
to compile a report with recommendations
in regards to the Parents
rights of access to the minor child, considering the allegations
levelled against both the mother and
the fathers current girlfriend.
4. the said
report is to be provided by no later than 28/02/2025.
5. the child
will be placed in the place of safety pending finalisation of the
said report & recommendations & further
determination by this
Court.
6. Pending
finalisation of the Report, the mother & father are allowed
supervised access with the minor child, once a
week (on separate
days) for a period of two hours. the said access is to be supervised
by the Relevant Parties at the place of
safety & conducted at the
Place of Safety.
7. p/p 28/02 for
the said Report.
8. both parties
warned.”
[22]
In respect
of the Orders granted on
12
December 2024
and
24
January 2025
no certainty was provided as to whether the Orders are still in
operation, Dad contending that due to the provisions of the
07
February 2025
Order, the terms of the
12
December 2024
and
24
January 2025
Orders, no longer being in force and effect,
[10]
thus having been accepted in argument by both parties that the only
relevant Order for the purposes of this Counter Application,
is the
Order of
07
February 2025
,
albeit that Dad raised whether the said Order was interim and/or
final, as the Order does not indicate which it is, however, given
the
nature of the proceedings pending in the Children’s Court,
Johannesburg North, Randburg, the reasonable interpretation
thereof
is that it is an Interim Order. I shall therefore not deal further
herein with either the
12
December 2024
or
24
January 2025
Orders.
The
legal principles applicable to Contempt of Court Applications
[23]
Our law on
civil Contempt of Court is well established. Contempt of Court is
defined as the wilful disobedience of a Court Order
and the purpose
of Contempt proceedings, serve to protect the rights of everyone to
fair trials, maintaining public confidence
in the judicial arm of
Government and upholding the integrity of Court Orders.
[11]
[24]
In summary, an Applicant in a Contempt Application must therefore
establish (1) the Court Order, (2) service or Notice
of the Court
Order, (3) non-compliance with the terms of the Order and (4)
wilfulness and
mala fides
but once the Applicant has proved,
(1) the Court Order, (2) service or Notice of the Court Order, and
(3) non-compliance with the
terms of the Order, the Respondent bears
an evidentiary burden in relation to (4), i.e. wilfulness and
mala
fides
.
[25]
The nature of the relief sought in this civil Contempt procedure is
not coercive but rather punitive. This is evident
as the Mom seeks an
order that Dad be committed to imprisonment for a period of 30 days
(
suspended for 2 years on condition that Dad fully complies with
the Court Order
).
[26]
Because the
relief sought in this Contempt Application is punitive and includes a
committal to imprisonment, the criminal standard
of proof of beyond a
reasonable doubt applies.
[12]
The onus is therefore not the ordinary civil onus (
i.e.
on a balance of probabilities
),
but instead one of beyond reasonable doubt.
[27]
As such, if
on all the evidence, there is a reasonable possibility that the
non-compliance with the Court Order in issue was not
wilful and
mala
fide
,
Contempt is not established.
[13]
[28]
The
wilfulness consideration is further supported by the requirement that
there must be an intention to defeat the course of justice
for an act
to constitute civil contempt.
[14]
The
relevant and material background facts
[29]
In these proceedings, it is common cause that (1) a Court Order
exists i.e. the
07 February 2025
Order, (2) Dad has
knowledge of the said Court Order and (3) there has not been
compliance with the express terms of the
07 February 2025
Order. However, Dad’s alleged wilfulness and/or
mala fides
are in dispute.
[30]
Accordingly, Mom is required to demonstrate Dad’s
non-compliance is wilful and/or
mala fide
, beyond a reasonable
doubt, in order to succeed with this Application.
[31]
Mom avers
that Dad has not complied with the
07
February 2025
Order in that he failed to arrange for the return of the minor child
by
11
February 2025
to Johannesburg from KwaZulu-Natal and/or hand her over the relevant
Social Worker so that she may be placed into Omphile House
for the
purposes of Tanya Kriel to compile a Report with recommendations.
[15]
[32]
Dad’s
position is that he acted immediately and applied to this Court for a
Review and Setting Aside of the
07
February 2025
Order on an urgent basis,
[16]
believing that the Review Application is founded, due to the
irregularities Dad sets out in relation thereto and continuously
alleging that the Review Application is premised on the prejudice and
trauma that the minor child will suffer if removed from his
family in
KwaZulu-Natal to Omphile House and that he has the minor child’s
best interests at heart. Given that this Court
informed the parties
that this Court sitting as a single Judge in the Family Court could
not hear the Review and Setting Aside
Application, Dad (
wisely
so
)
immediately actioned compliance with the
07
February 2025
Order, by arranging for the minor child to be flown to Johannesburg
and be handed to the Social Worker and Omphile House. It was
confirmed by the parties just prior to the conclusion of argument
that there had been compliance with the
07
February 2025
Order in that the minor child had been returned to Johannesburg,
handed over to the Social Worker and Omphile House. Accordingly,
Dad
acted
bona
fide
in
the honest belief that he was justified and proper, without the
intention to be wilful and
mala
fide
.
THE
FACTS AND THE LAW
[33]
In my view I find that Dad genuinely, even if mistakenly, believed
that he was entitled to proceed as he did. Even assuming
in favour of
Mom, that Dad’s conduct constituted a breach of an express term
of the
07 February 2025
Order, I am unable to find that
Dad’s conduct was
mala fide
. By all accounts, Dad’s,
bona fide
believed, is that he was entitled to proceed in the
way he did.
[34]
Accordingly, I find that in respect of the
07 February 2025
Order, Dad genuinely believed, even if mistakenly, that he was
entitled to act in a way claimed and I am therefore unable to find
that Dad has purposefully breached the terms of the
07 February
2025
Order.
[35]
As I have already stated, it has been emphasised by our Courts that
Contempt of Court is not a mere disobedience of a
Court Order but
consists of disrespectful judicial authority. Upon an analysis of the
facts it cannot be said that Dad wilfully
and
mala fide
failed
to comply with the provisions of the
07 February 2025
Order.
[36]
In my view, Dad has furnished a satisfactory explanation regarding
his non-compliance with the
07 February 2025
Order.
[37]
I find that Dad’s version before this Court discharges the
evidentiary burden resting on him and that he establishes
a
reasonable doubt that his non-compliance with the provision of the
07
February 2025
Order, was not wilful and
mala fide
.
[38]
Accordingly, Mom has not discharged the onus resting on her on the
standard of beyond a reasonable doubt.
[39]
It is concerning that Mom has sought drastic relief, particularly in
light of the fact that the Children’s Court
proceedings is
pending and not completed and the historic nature of the matter,
however, I will give Mom the benefit of the doubt
that she did not
intend to use the Contempt proceedings for an ulterior purpose.
[40]
Notwithstanding my aforesaid findings, I need to express my
displeasure in respect of the failure by the parties to comply
with
the Practice Manual and/or Practice Directives of this Division
relating to the setting down and hearing of urgent Applications.
This
coupled with the failure on the part of Dad not to file Heads of
Argument timeously, as a result, placed this Court under
extreme time
constraints to read lengthy papers and consider arguments submitted,
including in respect of technical legal issues.
It is my perception
that there was a distinct failure to recognise that each party was
required to act expeditiously, yet failed
to do so in the preparation
of the matter to be argued.
[41]
I also mention that the file on CaseLines reads as “
Duplicate
”
and no Compliance Statement is uploaded and whilst there is another
file on CaseLines not marked Duplicate, the file is
empty.
COSTS
OF THIS APPLICATION
[42]
Notwithstanding my finding that Dad is not guilty of Contempt of
Court, it does not necessarily follow, that costs ought
to be awarded
against Mom.
[43]
I am of the view that these Contempt proceedings should not have
reached the stage that it is did and that in light of
Dad’s
decision to comply with the Order of
07 February 2025
at a very advanced stage of the Application and argument, he ought to
have accepted Mom’s Tender presented on the morning
of the
second day of hearing and that his failure to have accepted the
Tender, in the circumstances, resulted in unnecessary argument
and
legal costs.
[44]
In the result, I am not inclined to grant costs in favour of Dad.
ORDER
GRANTED
[1]
I accordingly make the following Order in respect of the Counter
Application:-
1.1.
condoning and dispensing with the non-compliance with the forms, time
limits and service
provided for in the Uniform Rules of Court and
that the matter is enrolled and heard as an urgent Application in
terms of Uniform
Rule 6(12);
1.2.
Respondent’s points
in limine
are not upheld, either in
respect of lack of jurisdiction nor in respect of urgency;
1.3.
no order as to costs.
F.
MARCANDANATOS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
19 and 20 February 2025
Judgment
:
28 February 2025
Appearances
For
Applicant
:
Attorney J Crone
Tel: 010 594 5011
E-mail:
jonet@fhinc.co.za
Instructed
by
Falcon & Hume Incorporated
Ref: J Crone/W Wiersma
E-mail:
jonet@fhinc.co.za
Cell: 072 779 6680
For
Respondent
:
Adv G Olwagen-Meyer
Cell: 082 880 8253
E-mail:
gmeyer@law.co.za
Instructed
by
SKV Attorneys
Ref: J Hudson
E-mail:
jhudson@skvattorneys.co.za
Tel: (011) 781-2392
[1]
Notice of Counter Application: CL 02-174
[2]
Notice of Motion: CL: 02-2 to 02-6
[3]
Notice of Counter Application: CL 02-173 to 02-174
[4]
Heads of Argument in Counter Application: CL 19-32
[5]
Replying/Answering Affidavit in the Counter Application: CL 02-283
[6]
Notice of Motion in the Counter Application: CL 02-108 and
Respondent’s Heads of Argument in the Counter Application: CL
19-19 to 19-22
[7]
Annexure “LMA3”, CL 02-249
[8]
Respondent’s Heads of Argument in the Counter Application: CL
19-20
[9]
CL, 27-2
[10]
Respondent’s Heads of Argument in the Counter Application: par
23,CL 19-29,
[11]
Fakie N.O. v CCI Systems (Pty) Limited 2006 (4) SA 326(SCA)
[12]
Matjhabing Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Limited & Others,
Mkhonto & Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Limited
2018 (1)
SA 1CC
[13]
Fakie N.O. v CCI Systems (Pty) Limited 2006 (3) SA paras 67 and 85
to 88
[14]
Gauteng Gambling Board & Another v NEC for Economic Development,
Gauteng
2013 (5) SA 24
(SCA) par 51
[15]
par
48, CL 02-191
[16]
par
18 CL 02-287, par 20 CL 02-288, par 24 CL 02-289
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